14 April 2024
St.
Athanasius Lutheran Church
Easter 3
Vienna, VA
“Two Months”
Text:
Luke 24:36-49; Acts 3:11-21; 1 John 3:1-7
Alleluia! Christ is risen!
[He is risen indeed! Alleluia!] Alleluia!
Grace, mercy, and peace
to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ.
Amen.
A lot can change in two months.
First of all, exactly two months ago we were
gathered here in this place. The paraments were
black, our hearts were solemn, and our voices cried out in repentance. It was
February 14th, and Ash Wednesday. But now the paraments
are white, our hearts are filled with joy, and our voices cry out alleluia!
A lot has changed in two months.
Second, last week in the Introit, we prayed: Like
newborn infants, long for the pure spiritual milk, that by it you may grow up
to salvation (1 Peter 2:2). And for newborn infants, a lot changes in two
months as they get used to life outside the womb and grow so fast.
And third, in the readings we heard today from
the books of Luke and Acts, approximately two months have gone by.
In the reading from Luke it was Easter evening,
the disciples were afraid and hiding, and their hearts
were troubled and doubting. And their minds? Well,
they didn’t know what to think. They knew what Jesus had told them, but they
also knew what they saw with the horrible cross and the large stone that sealed
shut Jesus’ tomb. And what they now saw they weren’t sure was real! For
when they saw Jesus, they thought they saw a spirit, a ghost.
But in the reading from Acts, approximately two
months later, how different the disciples are! How much they have grown! From
their newborn faith of Easter evening, to now boldly and confidently
proclaiming - to those who just two months before had been yelling for Jesus’ crucifixion!
- saying you killed the Author of life, whom God raised from the dead.
The disciples are no longer afraid and hiding, and
their hearts are no longer troubled and doubting. They are all grown up. A lot
changed in two months.
But what changed? What caused this change in the
disciples? Was it seeing the risen Jesus? Hearing Him speak, seeing Him eat,
and touching His flesh and bones? Certainly that was part of it. Was it
receiving the Holy Spirit on the Day of Pentecost? That happened just before
the reading we heard today in Acts. And surely that was part of it as well. But
the pure spiritual milk that caused them to grow up - to grow up
to be Jesus’ apostles, and to grow up to salvation - was the Law of
Moses, the Prophets, and the Psalms. That is, the Scriptures. The Bible. The Word of God.
For that first Easter night, Jesus didn’t just
appear to His disciples and show Himself to them as risen
from the dead. That was great, but not enough. For even after seeing Him, hearing
Him, and touching Him, Luke tells us they still disbelieved for joy and
were marveling. Or in other words, it was too good to be true. And so when weeks, months, or years went by, and when the heat of
persecution was turned up high, when their brother apostles started being
martyred, when they weren’t sure what new struggle, hardship, or attack
tomorrow would bring, you can imagine them thinking back to this night and
sadly thinking: yup, it really was too good to be true.
For look at what’s happening! Victory? Nah. We just saw and believed what we wanted to see and
believe.
So after appearing to His disciples and showing
Himself to them as risen from the dead, Jesus feeds
them. He gives them that pure spiritual milk they need to grow up. He
opened their minds to understand the Scriptures. He showed them that
what had happened was no surprise, no accident. He showed them how Moses,
Joshua, David, Isaiah, Ezekiel, Daniel, Jeremiah - all the Law,
the Prophets, and the Psalms - had laid this all out. Hundreds and thousands of
years before it happened, it had all be spoken. This
was the promise. This was the plan. That the Christ should suffer and on
the third day rise from the dead, and then, that repentance and
forgiveness of sins should be proclaimed in his name to all nations, beginning
from Jerusalem. Jesus had fulfilled all the
first, and now they would fulfill all the second. He died and
rose from the dead, and now they would be the preachers, the
proclaimers, for they were the eyewitnesses. And they would start in the very
place it all happened, and to the very people who had crucified Him - beginning
in Jerusalem.
And just approximately two months later, there
they were, the disciples now apostles, in Jerusalem, at the Temple, healing a
man who had been lame from birth, and proclaiming Jesus. Oh, how much had
changed in two months!
And now it is us. But how much has, how much can change for you in a mere
sixty days? For the verse I mentioned before, about being like newborn
infants . . . for newborn infants, sixty days is a long time! When you’re
only sixty days old, sixty days is a doubling, a 100% increase in your life! So
of course a lot will change. But when you’re, say, sixty years old, or
21,915 days old, another 60 days is only a one-fifth of one percent increase in
your life. And surely, the other 99.997% of your life defines you and has
shaped you a lot more. So two months? Not that big a deal. Right?
Except it was for the
disciples.
Maybe
they weren’t sixty years old, but they weren’t sixty days either. But no matter
how old you are, how would not just sixty days, but sixty days filled with
the Word of God change you? Sixty days filled with Moses, Joshua, David,
Isaiah, Ezekiel, Daniel, Jeremiah, and more. Sixty days filled with what God
had promised, what God had done, and what God had
fulfilled for you. Sixty days not watching TikTok,
not scrolling through Instagram or SnapChat, not
reading X or Facebook posts, not conversing on Discord, or binge watching that
show. Sixty days of not filling your minds with the thoughts and opinions of
the world, but having your mind opened and filled with the Word of God. Do you
think those sixty days could, would, change a lot?
What if we were like newborn infants, longing
for that pure spiritual milk? Longing for the Word of God?
And so not just growing up, but growing up to salvation?
Well that is, in fact, how we should think of
ourselves. That’s how the apostle John put it today, telling us: See what
kind of love the Father has given to us, that we should be called children of
God; and so we are. Now, who was John talking to? How old were the
people He was writing to? No doubt of all ages. Some young,
some old. But all children.
Children of God. And if the age gap between a sixty
day old infant and a sixty year old adult is great, how great is the age gap
between us, however old you are, and the God of eternity? So
newborn infants? That really is who we are to our heavenly
Father. And what we need to be fed is the pure spiritual milk of God’s
Word.
And fed with the Word of God, we are who we are,
and we grow up to salvation. The Word of God makes all the difference.
It is by water and the Word that we are born from above as children of God. It
is by the Word of God that we are fed the Body and Blood of Jesus in bread and
wine. It is by the Word of God that our sins are forgiven, our hearts cleansed,
and our consciences put at ease. It is the Word of God that has brought all of
us here today and the Word of God that teaches us and trains us in
righteousness. It is the Word of God that reveals to us what we could not
otherwise know - that we have a loving heavenly Father, a Son who laid down His
life for us and took it up again, and the Spirit given to us and giving
us life. This pure spiritual milk, this Word of God, calls us, makes us, keeps
us, and sustains us as children of God.
And that is who you are, John says. Not who you may
be or should be, but are. That’s a statement of fact. Now, you
may not look like it or act like it or be very good at it, that may all be
true! And if being a child of God were up to you, maybe that
would disqualify you. But if God begets His children through water and
the Word (and He does!), and if God feeds His children with the very
Body and Blood of His Son in this bread and wine (and He does!), and if God
forgives His children with His Absolution (which He does!), and if God
gives you His Spirit (which He does!), then who you are is up to Him.
You are who He says you are, what His Word says you
are. His living, active, and powerful Word, which does what it says, from the
Word spoken in the first days of creation to the Word spoken here at Font,
Pulpit, and Altar. Children don’t decide to be born, they are
born. Of a father and a mother. And so have you been
born, both physically and spiritually.
The only way that ends is if you cut yourself off
from the source of your life - cut yourself off from the pure spiritual milk
of the Word of God. But with the Word of God there is life, there
is growth, there is peace and hope and righteousness. And you are like that
newborn infant, growing and maturing unto salvation. Growing and maturing, but
never ceasing to be children. Children of your heavenly
Father.
And so no matter how old you are, how much life
is behind you or how much life is ahead of you, as children, a lot can
change in sixty days. In fact, with the Word of God, a lot can change in
an instant! The instant the baptismal water is poured on you. The instant
the Body and Blood of Jesus are fed to you. The instant the Absolution is
pronounced to you. For the Lord doesn’t need sixty days - six hours on the
cross and three days in the tomb was enough! Enough to change
everything for you.
So in a world where we are being told to “grow
up!” and to “act your age!”, and where children are growing up faster than
ever, maybe it’s better not to! Maybe it’s better to stay children. Children of God. Children looking to our Father for all we
need. Or even more, to be like those newborn infants,
longing for pure spiritual milk. Safe and secure
in the arms of God. Growing but never grown. Maturing
but never independent. Growing but always children.
Until He appears, and, John says, we see Him as He is.
As He appeared to His disciples that first Easter evening, and as He will
appear to us on the final Easter, when not He but we rise from
the grave, to that life that has no end.
So on this sixtieth day after Ash Wednesday, a
lot has changed! Our mourning has turned into dancing and our sackcloth and
ashes into gladness and joy. Because Christ is risen! [He is risen indeed! Alleluia!] Alleluia!
In the Name of the
Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.